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tell us who are they? How many among these men are POETS (makers);
possessing the faculty to create; the greatest among the gifts with
which Providence has endowed the mind of man? Say how many there
are; count up what they have done; and see what in the course of
some nine…and…twenty years has been done by this indefatigable man。
What amazing energetic fecundity do we find in him! As a boy he
began to fight for bread; has been hungry (twice a day we trust)
ever since; and has been obliged to sell his wit for his bread week
by week。 And his wit; sterling gold as it is; will find no such
purchasers as the fashionable painter's thin pinchbeck; who can live
comfortably for six weeks; when paid for and painting a portrait;
and fancies his mind prodigiously occupied all the while。 There was
an artist in Paris; an artist hairdresser; who used to be fatigued
and take restoratives after inventing a new coiffure。 By no such
gentle operation of head…dressing has Cruikshank lived: time was (we
are told so in print) when for a picture with thirty heads in it he
was paid three guineasa poor week's pittance truly; and a dire
week's labor。 We make no doubt that the same labor would at present
bring him twenty times the sum; but whether it be ill paid or well;
what labor has Mr。 Cruikshank's been! Week by week; for thirty
years; to produce something new; some smiling offspring of painful
labor; quite independent and distinct from its ten thousand jovial
brethren; in what hours of sorrow and ill…health to be told by the
world; 〃Make us laugh or you starveGive us fresh fun; we have
eaten up the old and are hungry。 And all this has he been obliged
to doto wring laughter day by day; sometimes; perhaps; out of
want; often certainly from ill…health or depressionto keep the
fire of his brain perpetually alight: for the greedy public will
give it no leisure to cool。 This he has done and done well。 He has
told a thousand truths in as many strange and fascinating ways; he
has given a thousand new and pleasant thoughts to millions of
people; he has never used his wit dishonestly; he has never; in all
the exuberance of his frolicsome humor; caused a single painful or
guilty blush: how little do we think of the extraordinary power of
this man; and how ungrateful we are to him!
Here; as we are come round to the charge of ingratitude; the
starting…post from which we set out; perhaps we had better conclude。
The reader will perhaps wonder at the high…flown tone in which we
speak of the services and merits of an individual; whom he considers
a humble scraper on steel; that is wonderfully popular already。 But
none of us remember all the benefits we owe him; they have come one
by one; one driving out the memory of the other: it is only when we
come to examine them all together; as the writer has done; who has a
pile of books on the table before hima heap of personal kindnesses
from George Cruikshank (not presents; if you please; for we bought;
borrowed; or stole every one of them)that we feel what we owe him。
Look at one of Mr。 Cruikshank's works; and we pronounce him an
excellent humorist。 Look at all: his reputation is increased by a
kind of geometrical progression; as a whole diamond is a hundred
times more valuable than the hundred splinters into which it might
be broken would be。 A fine rough English diamond is this about
which we have been writing。
End